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More central banks signal plans to increase gold holdings, WGC survey shows

More central banks signal plans to increase gold holdings, WGC survey shows

ReutersTue, June 16, 2026 at 6:08 AM UTC

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1 / 0FILE PHOTO: Gold barsFILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: Gold bars are stored in a safe deposit room in Munich, Germany, January 28, 2026. REUTERS/ Angelika Warmuth/File Photo

LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - A record 45% of the reserve managers surveyed by the World Gold Council, up 2 percentage points from a year ago, ‌expect to increase their own institutions' gold holdings over the next 12 months, ‌the international organization said on Tuesday.

The majority — 54% of 74 central banks that responded to the WGC's annual ​survey, conducted between February 5 and May 19 — said their holdings would remain unchanged, while 1% anticipated a decline.

Most responses were received after the start of the Middle East conflict in late February, which triggered a rally in oil prices and drove gold prices down.

Central banks remain keen ‌on gold, and the recent ⁠price fall has not changed their minds, said Shaokai Fan, head of the central banks sector at the WGC.

The U.S. and Iran agreed ⁠over the weekend on terms to end their war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, prompting a 3% rise in gold prices on Monday. [GOL/]

Gold demand from central banks will slow down by ​15% year-on-year ​in 2026 in tonnage terms, according to consultancy ​Metals Focus, but remain above pre-2022 ‌levels, a consistently supportive factor for the market.

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The WGC said 93% of respondents reported already holding gold, up from 81% a year ago.

Among the drivers for gold ownership, a record 90% of respondents cited its performance during times of crisis. The top answers also included long-term store of value and portfolio diversification. Gold's role as a geopolitical risk hedge ‌was favoured among emerging market and developing economy respondents (85%).

As ​some central banks continued relocating their gold, 9% of ​respondents said they had increased domestic ​storage in the past 12 months, up from 5% last year, ‌and 10% said they had diversified their ​overseas storage locations, up ​from 2%.

Within 12 months, 7% plan to increase domestic storage and 9% plan to diversify overseas locations.

The WGC did not ask central banks to specify where their ​gold came from in cases ‌of repatriation.

However, its research showed that the Bank of England remains the most ​popular vaulting location, followed by domestic storage and the Bank for International ​Settlements.

(Reporting by Polina Devitt; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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